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Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz presents $887 million infrastructure spending plan at dam battered by floods

Jp Lawrence, Star Tribune on

Published in News & Features

MANKATO, Minn. – The battered Rapidan Dam at his back, Gov. Tim Walz proposed a bonding bill of $887 million that could fix impaired dams and other projects across the state on Thursday.

The governor’s proposal includes funding for a new State Patrol headquarters and $10 million marked for safety improvements at dams such as the one at Rapidan, which was heavily damaged in last year’s floods.

“This is the way Minnesotans take care of our assets,” Walz said.

The governor’s proposal is an early step in the process and comes after the 2024 legislative session adjourned without a bonding bill, leaving some local and statewide projects without public funding.

Walz announced his bonding bill proposal at the Rapidan Dam, which made national headlines last year after flooding causing the dam to partially fail. The west bank of the river flooded over the dam, with erosion pulling in a nearby house and destroying the Rapidan Dam Store, a longtime local business. Before the governor’s speech, a jackhammer could be heard as workers stripped the deck off the County Road 9 Bridge, also damaged during the flood.

This year’s infrastructure plan proposes $10 million for “dam safety improvements” at sites like the one in Rapidan, along with $5 million for flood mitigation and prevention around the state.

Walz pitched a $982 million capital investment plan last year when Democrats controlled both chambers of the Legislature. A package of projects was approved in the state House but failed to pass the Senate before a midnight deadline to adjourn.

The DFL no longer controls both chambers, and its members have been boycotting the Capitol and the House floor in an attempt to deny the GOP a quorum. Walz said he does not think these political maneuvers will affect the bonding bill, saying that budgets are not often seen this early in the session anyway.

 

“Any legislative body, they will wait to the end, no matter how long,” he said. “They’ll get it done.”

Minnesota lawmakers typically put together a package of construction projects across the state in the even-numbered years, but lawmakers have broken from that convention over the last decade. Democrats passed a $2.6 billion infrastructure proposal in 2023.

Unlike other spending proposals, bills that borrow money require a supermajority of more than three-fifths in both chambers of the Legislature, meaning DFL and GOP votes are needed for passage this year.

Walz’s plan this year includes:

Walz’s visit to Mankato, his former home as a teacher and congressman, also included a visit to the MN Ag Expo, a spokeswoman said.

Briana Bierschbach of the Minnesota Star Tribune contributed to this story.


©2025 The Minnesota Star Tribune. Visit startribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

 

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